shameonyouforsayingthat
ShameOnYouForSayingThat
shameonyouforsayingthat

It’s a trial court, so yes. Appeals court is the next level up, though NY has a weird name for that level too. See below. NY has a true supreme court above that, but they call it the Court of Appeals.

Eh...never ask that question straight. You CAN use it as a joke. Using it or a variation of it “So I start now, right? Where’s my desk? haha Just kidding” is a great way to fill what would otherwise be an awkward pause while you think of actual questions to ask your interviewer.

you can’t make anyone change.

Achievements are only secondarily relevant to your salary, at best. The only thing that matters is what the market will pay for your skills. If your employer won’t pay that now, they either need to give you a clear road map to getting there (get X cert/metric/whatev, get Y raise), or leave. And if they even *suggest*

You called me out, got checked, and like a true jackass, try to attack me instead of keeping on topic. You lost that one and no amount of your ad hominem bullshit is going to change that.

Quite familiar. The Hood wasn’t a battleship (and, like all pre-1930 capital ships had particularly poor deck armor and thus was especially bad with plunging shells from long range fire), and was sunk when it went toe to toe with one...at range even.

Sorry guy. I’ve had like 10 people misquote/misunderstand that post already, both here and elsewhere. Stomping out misconception before it becomes Internet Truth is tiring and that makes one curt in their responses.

Like other posters, you did not understand what I was saying. Seemingly because you don’t understand software, or how it’s used in relation to combat aircraft. That’s okay. You’ll find clarification in my response to other posters.

WHICH secondary duty? Aside from the Perry class (which was exceptionally large for a frigate in its day) no single hull could even do AAW/ASW/ASuW other than full fledged escorts. Even then, it wasn’t equipped for several other roles, such as MCM.

Because, unlike the Russian corvettes, these are emphatically *not* meant to attack a carrier battle group. LCS exists so that all the billion dollar warships can be tasks solely to missions that need their abilities. You don’t need an AEGIS system to hunt pirates, perform humanitarian support or let a coastal nation

In that neither are replacements for ships of the line? Yep, but that’s the whole idea. LCS isn’t meant to face down the PLAN. It’s meant to free up CGs/DDGs that *are* built for that purpose.

Nope. Not even then. And don’t be pedantic, a promo shot is a promo shot, not an operational flight.

Yes, never, as in “sure, Boeing slapped some on there for some promo pics, but the US Navy does not and will not ever send a real CAP up with that many missiles. Missile trucks are not happening even with networked warfare. ESPECIALLY because of networked warfare.”

Ada, though similar grammaticality to Pascal, is very different from it. And it’s not about the salaries and direct training costs, but the ongoing costs. It’s extremely wasteful to build up a huge dev team to rebuild the F-22 and then lay them off or keep them around just in case the USAF wants a V3.0.

F-18s never carry more than 6 AIM-120 in service. There is a long answer why, but it boils down to A) weight/drag and B) all those missiles change pilot psychology and tend to get them killed by sticking around too long. The name of the game is shoot and scoot.

Another unreported fact about the F-16-F-35 “dogfight” is that the specific F-35A used in that test was limited to 7G via software. Full 9G capability didn’t come until later software builds that hadn’t been installed on that jet.

It was different, but not for the reasons you state. Everyone knows the F-35 will be a great tactical bomber, and we’ll use that capability repeatedly.

You need to stop taking everything Rogoway says as literal facts. Because he doesn’t always know what he’s talking about.

I see you read my post in the other thread, and didn’t quite understand what I was talking about.

Yep. Language is not architecture. Language *does* require you to hire people fluent (or at least conversational) in it. Even if you write the fixes in C (F-35 uses some C version) you still need to be able to read the Ada so you know what the program is doing.